The last two episodes are a bit wordy, but the whole is very eye-catching. The styles of British and American dramas are really different. I especially like the damp and dark feeling in British dramas. Am I sick?
The conversation between the hostess and her son at the birthday party was my favorite scene. At first, I felt that this son is really nothing. No matter how wrong your mother is, you can’t treat your mother like that. After all, she is an elder. . But following the conversation, we know that the son has been deeply hurt by the mother's words. This tells us that before fully investigating an event or person, we must not judge others abruptly. We often show the so-called "justice" simply because these things have no direct interest relationship with us.
The storytelling ability of English dramas is really good, and it will tear apart the contradictions hidden in life bit by bit for you to see. We are anxious about the police grandmother's methods of solving the case, the police grandmother's skills, the IQ of the two criminals, and the father who is unwilling to call the police. This shows that the show has successfully caught our attention.
The performances of European and American dramas are very natural, and the performances in this drama are even more natural to the extreme, making it impossible to see that they are acting. Recently I have scanned a few episodes of domestic TV dramas. It feels like our actors are still acting on the end. They are telling the audience with a loudspeaker: "Attention, everyone, I'm going to start acting." It's like watching a drama, while watching it in embarrassment. We are too short of natural actors, and I think of uncle Ge You after all my thoughts. The gap between our film and television and Europe and the United States is really not just technology, technology is even the least important link. Screenwriters, actors and directors are what we really lag behind, although we sometimes don't admit it.
Start watching the second season.
View more about Happy Valley reviews